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At the time of writing, the Tories are the largest party, with 319 seats in total.

On top of that 319, they can usually count on the support of the Democratic Unionist Party in Northern Ireland, who won 10 seats last night.

That gives the Tories a theoretical route to an effective majority of 329, either through a coalition or a confidence and supply arrangement.

Labour is projected to get 261 seats. Add that to 35 SNP MPs, 12 from the Lib Dems, four from Plaid Cymru, one Green MP and one Independent and and you get 314 - 15 fewer than a Tory/DUP alliance and five fewer than the Tories alone.

Even if Labour convinced the seven Sinn Fein MPs to break decades of protest and show up to Westminster, which is extremely unlikely, it would still not be possible for Jeremy Corbyn to lead the biggest group in Parliament.

Is there any other way Corbyn could get into Number 10?

Yes, but take a deep breath.

It's entirely possible there could be another election.

The Tories can't survive for long as a minority government. Even if they made a formal deal with the DUP, a working majority of three is not sustainable.

So it's more than likely the country will have another election soon. Probably before the year is out.

And in that case, the country will have seen Jeremy Corbyn lead Labour to their best result in two decades. They'll have seen him perform much better under pressure than Theresa May and seen Labour MPs rally behind him and present a united front.

So it's entirely possible a second round - especially one where Corbyn's up against an already beaten May - could see him enter number 10.